On the Capacity of Distinguishable Synthetic Identity Generation under Face Verification

April 12, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท + Add venue

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Authors Behrooz Razeghi arXiv ID 2604.10641 Category cs.IT: Information Theory Cross-listed cs.IR, math.PR, stat.AP Citations 0
Abstract
We study how many synthetic identities can be generated so that a face verifier declares same-identity pairs as matches and different-identity pairs as non-matches at a fixed threshold $ฯ„$. We formalize this question for a generative face-recognition pipeline consisting of a generator followed by a normalized recognition map with outputs on the unit hypersphere. We define the capacity of distinguishable identity generation as the largest number of latent identities whose induced embedding distributions satisfy prescribed same-identity and different-identity verification constraints. In the deterministic view-invariant regime, we show that this capacity is characterized by a spherical-code problem over the realizable set of embeddings, and reduces to the classical spherical-code quantity under a full angular expressivity assumption. For stochastic identity generation, we introduce a centered model and derive a sufficient admissibility condition in which the required separation between identity centers is $\arccos(ฯ„)+2ฯ$, where $ฯ$ is a within-identity concentration radius. Under full angular expressivity, this yields spherical-code-based achievable lower bounds and a positive asymptotic lower bound on the exponential growth rate with embedding dimension. We also introduce a prior-constrained random-code capacity, in which latent identities are sampled independently from a given prior, and derive high-probability lower bounds in terms of pairwise separation-failure probabilities of the induced identity centers. Under a stronger full-cap-support model, we obtain a converse and an exact spherical-code characterization.
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